Mississippi guide
Mississippi condo insurance requirements
Insurance is the defining Mississippi condo risk, and the law leaves it almost entirely to the documents. The Mississippi Condominium Law does not mandate association insurance — § 89-9-17 only permits the declaration to provide for fire, casualty, liability, workers' compensation, and other insurance and bonding — so whether a master policy, fidelity bond, or flood coverage exists depends on the declaration and the board's choices, with lenders (Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, FHA) supplying the real floor for financeable condos.
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The dominant exposure is the Gulf Coast crisis: in the six wind-pool counties (Hancock, Harrison, Jackson, Pearl River, Stone, George), wind coverage alone can be roughly 70 percent of a premium, carriers including Allstate and Progressive have stopped writing coastal wind and hail, and owners are pushed into the state Mississippi Windstorm Underwriting Association (the wind pool) or surplus-lines carriers. The wind pool approved a roughly 16 percent rate increase effective January 1, 2026. Standard policies exclude flood, and much of the coast sits in FEMA A/AE and V/VE zones.
There is no statutory insurance mandate
Mississippi condo law does not require association insurance. Section 89-9-17 states only that the declaration may provide for the management body to maintain fire, casualty, liability, workers' compensation, and other insurance and bonding — so coverage is triggered by the documents and the board, not by statute. In practice the secondary mortgage market sets the real requirement: Fannie Mae, Freddie Mac, and FHA impose master-policy, replacement-cost, and deductible standards for financeable condos. Confirm a master policy actually exists, read what it covers, and check for a fidelity or crime bond protecting owner funds — none of which Mississippi statute compels.
The coastal wind crisis and the wind pool
On the coast, wind coverage alone can be roughly 70 percent of a premium, and major carriers including Allstate and Progressive have stopped writing coastal wind and hail. The Mississippi Windstorm Underwriting Association (MWUA, the wind pool) is the insurer of last resort for wind and hail in the six coastal counties, operating under a Plan of Operation effective April 1, 2025; it approved a roughly 16 percent rate increase effective January 1, 2026, following a 14.8 percent homeowner increase in 2024. Wind-pool premiums are typically higher than the private market, and the wind pool does not include flood. A master or wind policy placed through MWUA, or with a surplus-lines/unadmitted carrier, signals private-market unavailability and less regulatory protection.
Named-storm deductibles and financing risk
Coastal master policies commonly carry named-storm or hurricane percentage deductibles of 2 to 5 percent or more of insured value, which can dwarf reserves and convert directly into a special assessment after a storm. A deductible above roughly 5 percent of insured value can also impair conventional financing under Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac limits. Read the master declarations page for the named-storm deductible percentage and how deductibles are allocated to owners, confirm whether reserves can absorb it, and check your own HO-6 loss-assessment limit against it.
Flood gaps and FORTIFIED mitigation
Standard master and HO-6 policies exclude flood, and coastal Mississippi has extensive FEMA A/AE and V/VE areas; flood insurance (NFIP or private) is mandatory for federally backed mortgages in Special Flood Hazard Areas. Harrison, Hancock, and Jackson counties hold most of the state's NFIP policies, and associations frequently do not carry flood on common elements, leaving a major gap. Newer coastal buildings often market IBHS FORTIFIED construction (such as FORTIFIED Gold) because it can lower wind premiums, and the state's Strengthen Mississippi Homes program offers FORTIFIED-roof mitigation grants. Confirm the FEMA flood zone, the association's flood coverage, and the building's FORTIFIED/HB 1406 status.
Mississippi legal references
- Miss. Code Ann. § 89-9-17 — Declaration; insurance and bonding (permissive)
- Mississippi Windstorm Underwriting Association (MWUA) — Plan of Operation
- Mississippi Insurance Department — Strengthen Mississippi Homes (FORTIFIED grants)
- Mississippi Today — coast insurance crisis (wind ~70% of premium; carrier exits)
Informational only. Not legal advice. Always confirm against current statute and counsel.
Need help applying these Mississippi statutes to your specific situation? We can connect you with state-licensed counsel and specialists familiar with this exact regulatory environment.
Find a Mississippi specialist →Reviewer's checklist
- Confirm a master policy exists at all (insurance is permissive under § 89-9-17)
- Read the master declarations page for carrier, limits, wind/flood placement, and expiration
- Identify whether wind is placed through the MWUA wind pool or a surplus-lines carrier
- Identify the named-storm/hurricane percentage deductible and its percent of insured value
- Check whether the deductible exceeds ~5% of insured value (Fannie Mae / Freddie Mac financing risk)
- Confirm whether the association carries flood coverage on common elements (master policies exclude flood)
- Confirm the FEMA flood zone (A/AE/V/VE) and request an elevation certificate
- Confirm whether the building meets FORTIFIED / HB 1406 coastal wind-hardening standards
- Confirm whether a fidelity or crime bond protects owner funds (no statutory mandate)
- Review your own HO-6 loss-assessment limit against the master named-storm deductible
Want this same review on your actual documents? We do it free, with page citations you can verify.
Get My Free Risk Report →Source documents
- Declaration & bylawsthe rules
- Budget & financialsthe money
- Reserve studythe big repairs
- Meeting minuteswhat the board fears
Cross-reference
The risk lives in the contradiction between documents.
An assessment in the minutes but not the estoppel; a reserve the budget never funds.
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Every finding cites the document, page number, and quoted text.
How CondoSignal reviews this
We read the reserve study, operating budget, and 24 months of meeting minutes together — mississippi condo insurance requirements risk usually lives in the contradiction between documents, not in any single one of them. Every finding cites the source document, the page number, and the quoted text behind it.
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Related risk areas
Read these next to round out your due diligence
Condo Financing Requirements
Getting a mortgage on a condominium is not the same as financing a single-family home.
Insurance risk
The association's master insurance policy determines what your personal HO-6 policy needs to cover — and what it does not.
Special assessments
Special assessments are the single largest source of financial surprise in condo and HOA ownership.
Related reading
Guides for Mississippi buyers and owners
The Complete Condo Master Insurance Guide (2026)
How master policies are structured, how percentage deductibles create owner exposure, what your HO-6 needs to cover, and what to verify before you close — across Florida, Texas, and Arizona.
Condo Master Insurance Red Flags: What to Check Before Closing
Master-policy gaps, large deductibles, exclusions, and loss assessments can become the buyer's problem after closing. Learn what each section of the master insurance certificate discloses — and the red flags to check before you close.
Should I Buy a Condo With a High Master Insurance Deductible?
A high master-policy deductible can reach you as a loss assessment. Learn what to check on the master policy and HO-6 — and get a free review.
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Reviewed by Kirk Hasley, Founder. Every claim here is checked against current Mississippi statute and primary sources, using the same documented review framework we run on every file. Last reviewed June 13, 2026.
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Risk Intelligence
Get a free read on the notice you just got
A special assessment, an insurance non-renewal, a thin reserve study — find out whether it signals real risk, checked against your state's rules, with page citations you can verify. No cost, no obligation.
Expert Matching
Want help acting on what you found?
We can connect you with insurance brokers, realtors, and mortgage brokers who can help you respond to what your documents reveal.
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